South African University Leaders Strengthen Continental Ties at THE Africa Universities Summit 2026
In a landmark gathering that underscored the pivotal role of higher education in Africa's development, leaders from prominent South African universities, including the University of South Africa (Unisa), University of Johannesburg (UJ), and University of the Free State (UFS), actively participated in the Times Higher Education (THE) Africa Universities Summit 2026. Held on 30–31 March 2026 at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre in Nairobi, Kenya, the event drew over 350 attendees from more than 150 organisations and universities across the continent. With over 80 speakers and 30+ hours of content, the summit focused on 'Powering Africa’s future through talent development, innovation, and inclusion,' addressing critical areas like research for sustainable solutions, entrepreneurial ecosystems, work-ready skills, and equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI).
South Africa's presence was particularly notable, with vice-chancellors and senior executives from Unisa, UJ, and UFS not only attending but also contributing keynotes and panels. This participation highlights South Africa's leadership in pan-African higher education collaboration, especially as the country boasts several top-ranked institutions in THE's Africa University Rankings 2026, where UCT, Wits, and Stellenbosch feature prominently.
The Summit's Strategic Focus: Key Themes and Discussions
The summit's agenda was structured around four core pillars, reflecting the urgent needs of African higher education institutions (HEIs). Sessions explored how universities can drive regional growth by expanding human capital, fostering innovation, and promoting inclusivity. Hands-on workshops and visionary keynotes provided practical insights, with 9+ hours dedicated to networking among leaders from academia, industry, policy, and civil society.
- Addressing Global Challenges: Panels emphasised uniting global and local collaborations to harness research for sustainable solutions, particularly in climate change, health, and technology.
- Innovation and Entrepreneurship: Discussions on empowering entrepreneurial mindsets, bolstering digital skills, and strengthening start-up ecosystems to fuel economic growth.
- Work Readiness and Skills Development: Strategies for shaping future-ready graduates through employer partnerships, innovative curricula, and tailored student support.
- EDI and Gender Equality: Driving inclusion by removing barriers, fostering belonging, and increasing gender parity in higher education.
African HEIs face enrolment surges—over 15 million students continent-wide—with South Africa enrolling nearly 1 million, yet challenges like funding shortages (SA public funding at 0.7% GDP) and skills mismatches persist. The summit advocated for practical, context-driven approaches over generic global models.
Unisa's Delegation: Championing Africanisation and Internationalisation
Led by Principal and Vice-Chancellor Prof Puleng LenkaBula, Unisa's delegation—including Acting VP Strategy Matsheliso Molapo, Acting VP Research Mpho Ngoepe, and Chief Albert Luthuli Research Chair Puleng Segalo—played a prominent role. They engaged in panels on harnessing Africanisation and internationalisation, emphasising Unisa's open distance learning model as a scalable solution for Africa's access challenges. As Africa's largest university with over 400,000 students, Unisa positioned itself as a hub for inclusive education reaching underserved regions.
Prof LenkaBula highlighted Africa at a 'historical turning point,' urging universities to prioritise societal relevance amid rapid demographic shifts and digital transformation. Unisa's participation aligns with its strategy to forge pan-African partnerships, enhancing student mobility and joint research in areas like AI and sustainable development.
UFS Vice-Chancellor Prof Hester Klopper on Building Resilient Campuses
Prof Hester Klopper, Principal and Vice-Chancellor of UFS, delivered a compelling keynote on 31 March, calling for 'practical pathways to resilient African campuses.' She shifted focus from abstract strategies to actionable steps amid resource constraints and shifting societal expectations. Klopper stressed investing in institutional structures, human capital, and linking academia to real-world problems, advocating context-specific models over one-size-fits-all approaches.
UFS's delegation explored collaborations in research, student exchanges, and partnerships, aligning with the university's emphasis on societal impact. With UFS ranked among SA's top research institutions (THE Africa Rankings), this engagement bolsters its continental footprint, particularly in health sciences and agriculture—key to Africa's Agenda 2063.
UJ's Prof Letlhokwa Mpedi Advocates Bold Curricular Transformation
UJ's Principal and Vice-Chancellor Prof Letlhokwa Mpedi urged a 'bold transformation' of African universities, challenging institutions to rethink curricula for adaptive, problem-solving graduates. Speaking at the summit, he positioned education, employment, and entrepreneurship as structural priorities, highlighting UJ's growth into a dynamic hub for innovation.
UJ showcased partnerships with industry and government, demonstrating how multidisciplinary programmes prepare students for the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Mpedi's message resonated: 'If you think you are too small to make a difference, you have not spent a night with a mosquito,' encapsulating the need for proactive impact.
Photo by Jolame Chirwa on Unsplash
Fostering Innovation and Entrepreneurial Ecosystems
Innovation emerged as a cornerstone, with sessions on digital skills and start-up ecosystems. South African leaders contributed insights from SA's vibrant tech scene—home to Africa's unicorn Jumo—and called for HEIs to incubate ventures. UJ and Unisa highlighted AI and fintech programmes, while UFS discussed agritech for food security. The summit noted Africa's 1.4 billion population by 2050 demands 450 million jobs, underscoring universities' role in bridging skills gaps.
Delegates explored public-private partnerships, with examples like UFS's rural innovation hubs yielding 20% graduate employability gains.
Enhancing Work Readiness Through Industry Collaboration
Work readiness panels stressed employer-linked curricula. SA unis shared successes: Unisa's virtual internships reached 50,000 students, UJ's co-op model boasts 85% placement rates, UFS's career centres partner with 200 firms. Amid Africa's 12% youth unemployment (SA at 45%), these initiatives align with National Development Plan goals, promoting micro-credentials and apprenticeships.
Department of Higher Education and Training's Work Integrated Learning framework was referenced as a model.Advancing EDI and Gender Equality
EDI sessions tackled gender disparities—women comprise 40% of African HE students but 25% of faculty. SA leaders advocated mentorship and quotas; Unisa's women-led delegation exemplified progress. Prof Klopper noted UFS's 55% female graduation rate, urging continent-wide EDI strategies to boost innovation.
Tackling Global Challenges with Research and Collaboration
Research panels focused on climate resilience and health. SA's R&D investment (0.5% GDP) lags, but collaborations like UJ-Wits AI hubs show promise. Summit outcomes include MoUs for joint grants, positioning SA unis as anchors.
Summit Outcomes and Future Prospects
The summit concluded with calls for policy reforms and funding. SA leaders committed to intra-African exchanges, targeting 10% student mobility by 2030. For Unisa, UJ, UFS, it reinforces global rankings aspirations amid THE 2026 Africa table where SA holds 10 of top 20 spots.
Photo by Jolame Chirwa on Unsplash
Implications for South African Higher Education
SA participation elevates its voice in Agenda 2063, addressing NSFAS funding woes and infrastructure backlogs. Expect increased joint PhDs, tech transfers—e.g., UFS agritech exports—and policy influence. As Africa integrates via AfCFTA, SA unis gear for talent export/import, enhancing employability in a 60% youth demographic.
Challenges remain: SA's 30% dropout rate demands summit-inspired interventions. Yet, with leaders like LenkaBula, Mpedi, Klopper, SA HEIs are poised for resilient growth.
Looking Ahead: Africa's Higher Education Renaissance
THE Africa Summit 2026 catalysed momentum, with SA unis at the forefront. Future events, like THE World Academic Summit in Cape Town (Sept 2026), promise deeper ties. For stakeholders, it's a blueprint: innovate boldly, include equitably, impact tangibly. South Africa's triad—Unisa's scale, UJ's dynamism, UFS's resilience—exemplifies the path forward.
